Senate Faces Deadline on SGR; CMS Says Bill Not a Permanent Fix

CAL/AAEM News Service calaaem.news.service at gmail.com
Mon Apr 13 18:02:20 PDT 2015


 

Description: Description: Description: Description: CAL/AAEM: California
Chapter of the American Academy of Emergency Medicine

 

April 14, 2015

 

Senate Faces Deadline on SGR; CMS Says Bill Not a Permanent Fix

 

California Healthline
<http://www.californiahealthline.org/articles/2015/4/13/senate-faces-deadlin
e-on-sgr-cms-says-bill-not-a-permanent-fix> 

 

On Monday, the Senate returns from recess with a short window to pass
legislation (HR 2) to replace Medicare's sustainable growth rate formula
before CMS begins processing a 21% cut to physician reimbursements, Modern
Healthcare reports (Demko, Modern Healthcare, 4/11).

 

Background

 

The House last month voted 392-37 to approve HR 2 (California Healthline,
4/2). The measure would provide a 0.5% annual raise through 2019 for
providers who participate in Medicare before transitioning to an
incentive-based payment system designed to encourage participation in
alternative payment models (Demko, Modern Healthcare, 4/10). The bill
includes several other measures related to health spending, such as funding
for community health centers, which serve low-income individuals in every
state.

 

Although a 21% cut to physician reimbursements under the SGR took effect
April 1, CMS earlier this month said that, barring congressional action, it
would not begin processing the payment cuts until April 15. A CMS official
said, "Should Congress act subsequently, CMS will reprocess those claims
paid at the lower payment rate to reflect the new payment rates." However,
such a move could increase administrative costs.

 

Overall, the SGR replacement measure would cost $213 billion. The deal would
offset about $70 billion of the projected costs. Roughly half of the
possible deal's offsets would come from cuts to hospitals, insurers and
acute-care providers. The other half of the offsets would come from cuts to
Medicare beneficiaries, such as additional means testing for high-income
beneficiaries (California Healthline, 4/2).

 

CMS: SGR Replacement Not a Permanent Solution

 

In related news, Medicare beneficiaries' access to care could "be severely
compromised" in the future even if HR 2 passes, according to a report
released last week by CMS' Office of the Actuary,Modern Healthcare reports.

 

The report found that:

.       Medicare payment rates for physicians and other eligible
professionals would be lower in 2049 with the new payment system than under
the SGR formula; and

.       Medicare payments starting after 2024 would begin to fall behind the
project rates under current law and would not keep up with inflation (Modern
Healthcare, 4/10).

 

CMS Chief Actuary Paul Spitalnic wrote in the report that Congress would
need to take further action in later years to maintain beneficiaries' access
to care, even if HR 2 passes. He wrote that the new payment rates under the
legislation "would be adequate for many years" but could fall short during
years with high inflation (Ferris, The Hill, 4/10).

 

According to Modern Healthcare, the report could "make it more difficult"
for the Senate to pass the SGR replacement measure (Modern Healthcare,
4/10).

 

Reaction

 

Paul Winfree, director of the Heritage Foundation's economic policy center,
said on Friday that the report showed that "in fact, the House measure is
not a permanent fix to the broken [SGR]." He added that the measure would
require "another series of patchwork legislation just nine years from now"
(The Hill, 4/10).

 

Meanwhile, American Medical Association President Robert Wah in a statement
called the report's findings as "illogical, flawed and dangerous for patient
access to high quality health care." He said the report was based on the
assumption that the current SGR formula would result in payment rate
increases, which he said was "simply unbelievable given our long history
with the flawed SGR formula." He added, "Fluctuations in just two of the
factors that affect SGR calculations -- GDP growth and Medicare spending
growth -- are far too unpredictable to make this a reasonable assumption"
(Haberkorn, Politico Pro, 4/10).

 

Lawmakers' Objections Could Delay Bill

 

In other related news, objections to the bill raised by several conservative
lawmakers are "raising doubts" about whether HR 2 will quickly pass in the
Senate, Reuters reports.

 

According to Reuters, Senate rules allow lawmakers the power to delay
legislation, even if a majority of the chamber supports the measure.
Further, any Senate amendments mean the bill would need to return to the
House for consideration (Cornwell, Reuters, 4/10).

 

Some Senate lawmakers have discussed several proposals to amend the
House-passed SGR replacement measure.

 

For example, Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah) is expected to propose an amendment that
would require lawmakers to fully fund the replacement measure (Reuters,
4/10)

 

Nonetheless, the chances any amendments would pass appear to be "small,"
according to theAP/Sacramento Bee (Fram, AP/Sacramento Bee, 4/11).

 

 

 

Bryan Sloane
Deputy Editor, CAL/AAEM News Service

 

Brian Potts MD, MBA
Managing Editor, CAL/AAEM News Service



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